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A program on the radio called "State of the Reunion" recently spent time in Appalachia and dealt with this new abomination, you can listen to it here http://stateofthereunion.com/home/season-2/appalachia

It seems the 21st century quickly vies to sicken us even more than the last one, as we outdo ourselves in putrid greedy destruction department.

Thanks for keeping it real (blowing tops off mountains is much too grim for words). Speaking of which, we're going up to the mountains today (if they're still there), Johnny's first time skiiing. . . .

Vincent, the deeper I got into looking into this matter, the more it burned. Slow and hot, like Eastern Kentucky coal.

To think that 150 of those lovely greenclad Knobs and Peaks, points on the crown of the summit of all the watersheds of the Eastern United States, the sight of which had made Daniel Boone, and the settlers who followed him through the Cumberland Gap, believe they had entered a kind of Paradise, have been shorn off and blown up...

Someone here who is not much given to enduring video links not only sat all the way through that devastating 8 minute video exposition to which I linked, but toward the end -- well, though not indeed "an American", I think she had no trouble grasping the extent to which whatever blessings may have once fallen upon this land, have now been forfeited, forsaken, forever.

It makes deforestation look like child's play and who could have guessed we would do worse than that.Let's just take all the dystopian sci-fi novels and move them to a new section, future history, and be done with it. Let's figure out a way to power Ipods (or Iphones or whatever they're called) with toddler's life energy, and keep the kids in the craters left on the mountaintops, run the pipeline down next to the unemployment agency where beggars get one drop of life blood per day in return for presigning away their votes for Donald Trump

Of course that "new" method of skipping the mining part and just blowing off the top of the mountain so that the coal simply lies there waiting to be taken (an updating of the old whore of babylon solution to the "energy" issue) has already trumped Trump by filling the Unemployment halls of Appalachia with miners made redundant by munitions and machines.

But to speak of Unemployment halls is a formal misnomer as I learned in my descent, almost four years ago, from the basement stratum of the employed, through purgatorial levels of notaries and state agencies and boards of arbitration in tall buildings (where I learned that the purpose of such agencies is to protect shady employers from having to pay what is legally owed ex-employees), thence downward to the Halls of which we speak.

In fact the place was euphemistically designated an Employment Center, though no one ever walked out of it employed except the time servers who ran it.

A large broken down concrete box that looked like it had been dropped from the sky by an infernal hand smack in the midst of the burned out postindustrial landscape that surrounds that august edifice the Oakland Coliseum.

Inside, the place smelled of piss and stale tobacco smoke, even though there was no smoking; the butts ground into the dirt and litter of the stairwells formed a sodden unwelcome mat beneath one's ancient feet as one wearily and without hope toiled up the stairs to the large area of milling and shuffling and waiting in which hundreds of miserable souls, the army of the lost, were moved along like cattle through various perfunctory and desultory "presentations" delivered by the dead-voiced to the legions of the glazed-eyed; we learned, for example, that one great idea for getting a job would be to put together an electronic resumé featuring high-resolution photos of your monster truck.

But what if one does not own a monster truck? I wanted to ask but didn't have the heart.

But why are we saying all this. If we're not Trumped we might yet get Palin'd, and in that case, the surviving folk of Appalachia won't even be able to take to the hills, because there wouldn't be any left.